Kristin Jacobs undeterred in effort to regulate "scourge" of kratom

jacobs, kristin

First there were bath salts, then K2 and now… there’s kratom.

Some Thai officials swear by it, the Drug Enforcement agency lists it as a “drug of concern” and the bipartisan duo of Crestview Republican Sen. Greg Evers and Democratic Rep. Kristin Jacobs of Coconut Creek are trying to outright ban it in Florida.

With the first bill she has ever run, Jacobs is trying to make a complex policy change involving contested science, an embattled and slow-moving state law enforcement bureaucracy, and opposition in her own party’s base — no mean feat for a first-term lawmaker in a super-minority.

But then Jacobs is no average freshman. And for her, this is personal.

She comes to the statehouse from the Broward County Commission, a powerful body many legislators would prefer a seat on, and as a former (granted, largely ceremonial) mayor of a county of more than 1.7 million.

She also has met with the parents of a 24-year-old Santa Rosa man whose cause of death was uncertain until months later, partly because kratom and its ingredients are not scheduled as drugs per se and not in most medical examiners’ purview. Jacobs plans to change that. Though some will point to so-called healing properties, she emphasizes that no U.S. authority has found the substance to have medicinal use nor that even avid users can agree on what exactly is in their fix.

“The purveyors and distributors will argue that in fact kratom is not a drug, it’s harmless, an almost magical ‘herb,'” Jacobs told Florida Politics. “Last time I checked cocaine and heroine came from plants and we know what a scourge they’ve been.”

“If kratom is so wonderful why did the FDA issue an alert three weeks ago in order to confiscate any shipment which contains the active ingredient in kratom?” Jacobs continued. “Kratom is unregulated so no one knows what it’s cut with, or even if it contains any kratom at all in those packets. This is about profit over public health and safety brought to you by the same people who once peddled bath salts, SPICE, and K2.”

Jacobs is not alone in her concern among elected officials. Aside from her fellow South Florida co-sponsors, Dave Aronberg, the state attorney for Palm Beach County where unlicensed kratom consumption is common in the many popular kava bars there, is also watching the issue closely.

“The stories are heartbreaking,” Aronberg said Thursday. “Whether it becomes a scheduled drug or a nonscheduled regulated substance, I’m always concerned when there’s a potential for abuse. Whatever the Legislature decides, I think it’s important to have this conversation in Tallahassee.”

The House Criminal Justice Subcommittee passed a Rep. Clay Ingram-sponsored bill — HB 897 — Thursday banning certain synthetic substances akin to SPICE, but it makes no mention of kratom or its botanical name, mitragyna speciosa. 

Ryan Ray

Ryan Ray covers politics and public policy in North Florida and across the state. He has also worked as a legislative researcher and political campaign staffer. He can be reached at [email protected].



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